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A Broken Connection: The Armenian Financial Community and the Making

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  • A Broken Connection: The Armenian Financial Community and the Making

    A Broken Connection: The Armenian Financial Community and the Making of Culture

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/01/18/a-broken-connection-the-armenian-financial-community-and-the-making-of-culture/
    By Peter Balakian // January 18, 2014


    When the Illinois Holocaust Museum asked me in the late summer of 2012
    if I would be the advising scholar and a primary writer of text for a
    major exhibit that the museum would develop for the commemoration of
    the Armenian Genocide in 2015, I was delighted and agreed. I was also
    excited by the idea that the exhibit would travel not only in the
    United States, but possibly in Europe and South America. It was a
    breakthrough to have the second largest Holocaust museum in the United
    States planning an Armenian Genocide exhibit entitled, `The Shadow of
    Ararat: The Armenian Genocide.' Not only would there be a significant
    exhibit - as the advising scholar, I can affirm that the proposal was
    excellent - it would be orchestrated and curated by a non-Armenian
    organization of high professional expertise.

    In the last week of April, I went to the Illinois Holocaust Museum to
    give a keynote lecture for the April 24th commemoration and to kick
    off the campaign to raise the funding for the exhibit from the
    Armenian community of Chicago. We all left in good spirits,
    anticipating working together on the project. But, in early October,
    when I hadn't heard anything from the curators at the museum, I called
    to see what was happening. My friends there reported that despite
    various conversations with the leaders of the Chicago-Armenian
    community, the community had not delivered any funding. Apparently,
    they had tried to find funds outside of their region as well, but in
    the end could not deliver any funding, and the time necessary for
    planning was running out. I was shocked.

    The budget, which was about $600,000, seemed appropriate for the show
    planned, and in a larger context, I would say, it was a bargain, for
    this was a dream come true for many Armenians. With the museum about
    to pull the plug on it, I went into emergency mode, trying to raise
    several hundred thousand dollars in less than two weeks. I made calls
    for days to various friends and colleagues around the country. In the
    end, I could not raise enough money in such a short time. Shortly
    after, the museum cancelled its plans for the exhibit.

    While many of us are more than disappointed in the failure of the
    Chicago-Armenian community to fulfill its obligation for 2015, I think
    this reflects a larger failure of the Armenian Diasporan community in
    the United States to create culture - by which I mean to use financial
    means to conceive and engineer cultural production. A hundred years
    after the genocide, Armenians in the United States, probably the most
    propitious place in the world for cultural production (just look at
    the film, book, arts and performing arts industries in the U.S.), have
    almost nothing to show in the domain of cultural production and
    representation in the mainstream. Armenians have created no mainstream
    cultural foundations, museums, performing arts centers, except for
    several cultural institutions such as NAASR, ANI, the Armenian Library
    and Museum, Zoryan Institute in Canada, all of which do admirable
    work, but there are no research institutes like that of the Armenian
    Genocide Museum-Institute in Yerevan.

    The Armenian financial community has not been able to bring to
    fruition one feature film about the genocide or other aspects of
    Armenian history. By 2013, and given the presence of Armenian
    Americans in Hollywood in the 20th century, there's something shocking
    about this. Surely, there might have been at least a dozen or so
    feature films dealing with these issues and stories in the past 50
    years.

    I want to underscore the obvious. Without culture there is no presence
    of a nation/ethnic group/people in a given society - in popular cultural
    thought, academic and intellectual thought, and in the wider global
    culture. Individuals live and die, money comes and goes, national
    borders appear and disappear, but artistic representation and culture
    remain the primary mode of general knowledge about any
    civilization/nation/ethnic group. Without museums, centers for the
    visual and performing arts, research institutes, sustained funding for
    translations, endowed chairs for academics, and more, there is no
    identity for any nation.

    In the Armenian case (and I'm sure Armenians are not alone in this)
    something has gone wrong, or perhaps has not gone at all. Armenians in
    the United States, and probably in Europe, South America, and the
    Middle East (this is not true in the Republic of Armenia), have almost
    nothing to show as culture, either to themselves or to the wider
    public. Other than the individual achievements of various people in
    the arts and academic and intellectual world who have broken through
    into the mainstream, Armenian culture is a blank to our fellow
    Americans.

    One Jewish scholar put it this way: 'There seems to be a disconnect
    between the Armenian business community and the Armenian arts
    community; the business people don't see that investing in the arts is
    investing in the core continuity of Armenian civilization. Investing
    in the community's culture should be understood as a celebration of
    the life of all Armenians past and present, something that the Turkish
    perpetrators tried to extinguish. This is certainly the philosophy of
    a lot of Jewish investment in Jewish arts. It's a `f-you Hitler'
    attitude.'

    Let's take, just briefly, the case of Jewish-American culture as an
    example. We must acknowledge that there are more Jews than Armenians
    in the United States and in the world, and that there are
    correspondingly more resources, and that there is a much longer
    history in their diaspora and hence more experience.

    Notwithstanding this, the discrepancy between Jewish-American cultural
    production and Armenian-American cultural production is painful to
    consider.

    If we take New York City alone, we find that Jewish culture is
    represented by major institutions: the Jewish Museum, the Museum of
    Jewish Heritage, the 92nd Street Y, and the Center for Jewish History,
    which houses five Jewish cultural organizations. All of these are
    beautiful edifices run with high administrative professionalism, and
    all serve a broad public. If you look just cursorily around the
    country, you find the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in
    Washington, D.C., the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, Holocaust
    museums in major cities from Chicago to Houston to Fort Lauderdale. I
    won't spend time cataloging the Jewish cultural centers, the endowed
    chairs, the journals, magazines, newspapers, publishing imprints, and
    so on. The fact is clear.

    There is no Armenian who would not applaud Armenian-American
    philanthropists for the commitment they have made to the Republic
    since its independence and to the extraordinary work organizations
    like the AGBU (the grandparent of it all), FAR, Armenian Tree Project,
    COAF, and others have done globally over the past decades for Armenian
    communities everywhere. Armenian civilization is about 2,500 years old
    and it embodies a remarkable story of survival against great odds. Its
    survival and identity are inextricable from the existence of the
    seminal texts made by such figures as Toros Roslin, Krikor of Nareg,
    Avivovsky, Komitas, Charents, Essayan, Gorky, Sarian, Saroyan,
    Paradjanov, Minas, Khatchadourian, Hovaness, the architects of the
    medieval churches, and so on. Armenian artists and intellectuals have
    been impressive cultural and aesthetic creators, especially given the
    duress of their historical situation. But they have not been backed by
    their financial communities.

    If in the modern era the Armenian financial community can't figure out
    ways to produce and finance Armenian culture and history - both
    historical and contemporary - and our present is very rich and dynamic
    (perhaps more so than ever) with artists, writers, composers,
    filmmakers, and others, then Armenian culture will not exist in any
    serious, representative way in the wider public arena, and
    correspondingly, Armenia as a cultural entity will be relegated to a
    ghettoized place in an obscure corner. This need not be the case.

    There are some extraordinary individuals in our business community who
    have made a great deal happen, and some of them - though very few - have
    put some of their energies toward culture and education. They are
    great visionaries for doing so. I am deeply grateful for the personal
    support I've received from some of these extraordinary people. But,
    for the most part, in the big picture, there has been no sustained
    creation and nurturing of cultural production of the kind I and many
    of my colleagues in the various cultural arenas are noting.

    I know it's difficult - given the pressing challenges of working for the
    Republic and working for a complex diasporan society - but it has to be
    done. The Armenian community - especially its financial
    infrastructure - has to begin to work with its cultural producers
    (writers, artists, architects, academics, journalists, etc.) in order
    to create lasting institutions, fora, structures for culture to be
    made, created, and represented.

    Furthermore, certain segments of the Armenian community need to feel
    at ease and embrace other communities that want to support Armenian
    history and culture. It might be noted that the only major PBS
    documentary made about the Armenian Genocide was made by Andrew
    Goldberg, and the only major feature film - Atom Egoyan's `Ararat' - was
    produced by Robert Lantos.

    The Armenian financial community has to turn the corner; it has to see
    the issue in a fresh and larger way, to make Armenian cultural
    production a top priority, if Armenian history and culture - and Armenia
    as a significant, ancient civilization - are to be a visible force in
    the global arena. There can be no progress without this.

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